Small Device Brings Big Power Potential

Wednesday, September 1, 2010 @ 06:09 PM gHale

A mirco-supercapacitor has the potential to power nomad electronics, wireless sensor networks, biomedical implants, active radiofrequency identification (RFID) tags and embedded microsensors.
Supercapacitors, also called electric double layer capacitors (EDLCs) or ultracapacitors, bridge the gap between batteries, which offer high energy densities but are slow, and “conventional” electrolytic capacitors, which are fast but have low energy densities, according to a team of researchers from the U.S. and France.
The newly developed devices have powers per volume comparable to electrolytic capacitors, capacitances four orders of magnitude higher, and energies per volume that are an order of magnitude higher. They were also three orders of magnitude faster than conventional supercapacitors, which see use in backup power supplies, wind power generators and other machinery. Researchers call these new devices “micro-supercapacitors” because they are only a few micrometers (0.000001 meters) thick.
“Supercapacitors store energy in layers of ions at high surface area electrodes,” said Dr. Yury Gogotsi, trustee chair professor of materials science and engineering at Drexel University, and a co-author of a paper on the subject. “The higher the surface area per volume of the electrode material, the better the performance of the supercapacitor.”
“We use electrodes made of onion-like carbon, a material in which each individual particle is made up of concentric spheres of carbon atoms, similar to the layers of an onion,” said Dr. Vadym Mochalin, research assistant professor of materials science and engineering at Drexel and co-author. “Each particle is 6-7 nanometers in diameter.”
This is the first time researchers studied a material with very small spherical particles for this purpose. Previously investigated materials include activated carbon, nanotubes, and carbide-derived carbon (CDC).
“The surface of the onion-like carbons is fully accessible to ions, whereas with some other materials, the size or shape of the pores or of the particles themselves would slow down the charging or discharging process,” Mochalin said. “Furthermore, we used a process to assemble the devices that did not require a polymer binder material to hold the electrodes together, which further improved the electrode conductivity and the charge/discharge rate. Therefore, our supercapacitors can deliver power in milliseconds, much faster than any battery or supercapacitor used today.”